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Calgary's sprawl is cancelling out climate progress

In 1969, Cochrane, Alta., had a population of 900 people, it’s since grown to 29,277. Photo by Sarah Lawrynuik

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Driving into the lush foothills of southern Alberta with the snow-capped mountains on the horizon, it isn’t hard to see what has people flocking to the beautiful town of Cochrane — close to the city, where you can raise your family with a backyard and that small-town feel.

But the vast growth of bedroom communities surrounding bigger cities in Alberta is undermining efforts to mitigate urban sprawl and carbon emissions in urban centres.

“It’s massive, massive expansion,” said Sasha Tsenkova, a professor of planning and international development in the Faculty of Environmental Design at the University of Calgary.

“What is being achieved in terms of sustainable development in the city proper is completely wiped out as an impact on the environment by these kinds of peripheral developments.”

Tsenkova said this is a problem across North America because there is so much land on which to sprawl.

Vast growth of bedroom communities surrounding bigger cities in Alberta is undermining efforts to mitigate urban sprawl and carbon emissions in urban centres. 

The bedroom, commuter communities boom

For years, Cochrane has been a source of fascination for its insanely rapid growth rates. The 1969 municipal census pegged the village’s population at 900. The most recent count totalled 29,277.

That growth rate rocketed to 47.1 per cent between 2011 and 2016, according to Statistics Canada, the second-fastest in the country, behind Warman, Sask., just north of Saskatoon.

If Cochrane or Warman were isolated cases, it would be one thing, but they aren’t. Airdrie, just north of Calgary, grew by 42.3 per cent in the same period. Chestermere, just east, grew by 34.2 per cent. Four communities surrounding Edmonton grew in excess of 20 per cent.

Cochrane Mayor Jeff Genung guesses that the town was almost fully composed of single-family homes until about 2007, and even then, the number of multi-family units — whether they are condos or townhouses — makes up less than 10 per cent of the town.

But the sprawl associated with single-family homes is a problem when it comes to climate action.

“Council's working with administration on a community vision and one of the aspirations of that is to drive more density into our core,” Genung said. “We don't want to continue to grow outward and continue to take up countryside. We're actually trying to preserve that buffer.”

A fox skirts around the edges of Cochrane’s golf course, lined by single-family homes. Photo by Sarah Lawrynuik

One of the biggest issues with sprawl is that people end up living further from work, school and other activities.

According to the latest data, which is from 2011, 65,131 commuters travelled into the city from the surrounding region, on average, every weekday. Over the decade prior, the number of commuters from the region increased by 32 per cent. That number will have certainly grown since, given that the population of the region boomed after 2011.

Even up to 2011, the study of regional traffic found fewer people were walking to work in Calgary because a smaller percentage of people lived close enough to the downtown. Two-thirds of people in the regions were commuting into Calgary for work and principally, that commute is made by car.

To begin addressing this issue, regional transit busses have serviced the Calgary region since 2016. In Cochrane, they’re also focusing on increasing job numbers so not as many residents need to make the drive into Calgary each day.

“The hope is that we will generate more jobs and reduce the amount of people that need to commute back and forth because they’ll actually work here,” said Dave Devana, Cochrane’s chief administrative officer.

Cochrane Mayor Jeff Genung (left) and CAO Dave Devana pose in plaid, in preparation for a visit to the Calgary Stampede in early July. Photo by Sarah Lawrynuik

Meanwhile, Genung and Devana are still hopeful the provincial government will invest in a regional rail transport that would connect the Calgary airport with the downtown, Cochrane and Banff.

“So, get auto traffic off of the highways, which would reduce, obviously, all those greenhouse gas emissions, but also lessen the load for the province to now have to step in with all this infrastructure money to build bigger highways,” Genung said.

A price tag for such a project has been pegged at roughly $660 million.

'How is it even possible that for 50 years we’ve become so comfortable with sprawl?'

The original issue Tsenkova raised was that any efforts by the big cities to rein in their own urban sprawl is now being wiped out. The growth of the commuter communities puts pressure on Calgary city planners because if they offer fewer single-family homes and focus on densification, they have to face the fact people may just move out of the city limits.

“It is a tricky dynamic,” said Chris Blaschuk, manager of the City of Calgary’s Next 20 project, which is reviewing the municipal development and transportation plans. “(Demand for) our semi-detached and our (multi-unit dwellings) is increasing faster than single-family homes, so the demand to shift to those types of dwellings in the city is increasing slightly.”

Last summer, Calgary city council approved 14 new suburban communities for development, adding more than 18,000 single-family homes and only half as many multi-family units.

Regional growth plans are in the works, but these constraints are non-binding. Cochrane is planning for four per cent growth annually. That would put its population just over 45,000 by 2030.

The City of Calgary’s climate change manager, Dick Ebersohn, says these growth models are calculated in the city’s emissions-reduction models.

“It is very challenging and I think collaboration in the future is going to be really important,” Ebersohn said.

Tsenkova says this alarming trend must be reversed if climate action is to be taken seriously.

“In North America in general, development patterns are surprisingly well-entrenched. And if you think about it, it wasn’t until the ’50s and early ’60s when suburban development started in earnest. So, how is it even possible that for 50 years we’ve become so comfortable with sprawl? It’s mind-boggling!”

Tsenkova went on to say that the quintessential image of what people strive for needs to change, and that need not mean personal sacrifice, simply a reimagining of how we live, work and play.

“The climate change imperative will require leaders to rethink all of this,” Tsenkova said. “And it’s not just about the newly built, it’s about retrofitting what we have.”

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